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Ross Honeywill Ross Honeywill i(A135530 works by)
Born: Established: 1949 ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Water in the Wires Ross Honeywill , 2011 single work short story
— Appears in: Island , Spring no. 126 2011; (p. 96-102)
1 St Kilda Jim's Turbulent Life Ross Honeywill , 2010 extract biography (Wasted: The True Story of Jim McNeil, Violent Criminal and Brilliant Playwright)
— Appears in: The Sun-Herald , 29 August 2010; (p. 8-9) The Sunday Age , 29 August 2010; (p. 16)
1 5 y separately published work icon Wasted: The True Story of Jim McNeil, Violent Criminal and Brilliant Playwright Ross Honeywill , Camberwell : Viking , 2010 Z1720893 2010 single work biography

'At thirteen, Jim McNeil quit school for good. At fourteen, he started an affair with a brothel madam and was introduced to Melbourne's underworld. Despite his love of reading and philosophy, McNeil relished his life among thugs, thieves and whores, becoming one of the city's most violent criminals.

'In 1967, having jumped bail and fled to New South Wales, 32-year-old McNeil shot a policeman during an armed robbery. He was convicted and began a seventeen-year prison sentence, leaving behind his pregnant wife and five children. Survival in jail meant negotiating a path between the wardens' abuse and the inmates' violent gangs. McNeil joined a reform group known as the Resurgents, where he was encouraged - for the first time in his life - to write.

'When he wrote his first play, McNeil had never set foot in a theatre. Just four years later he was a celebrity, freed ten years early thanks to a powerful group of Sydney's elite, who declared him one of the country's most important writers. McNeil soon married actress Robyn Nevin, won the Australian Writers' Guild's script award and was commissioned to write the screenplay for My Brilliant Career. Charismatic and charming, he seemed at the height of his powers.

'But McNeil never wrote again. Pursued by Sydney society and lost in a world that lacked the strict regimen of prison life, he fell back into alcoholism and violence. He returned to the streets and was dead within a decade. His four plays stand as a testament to a talent sadly wasted.

'For the first time, this is the story of Jim McNeil's tragic, mesmerising life.' (From the publisher's website.)

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